Redland City Council Timeline

Redland City Council Timeline

Council Cleveland Divisional Board – Tingalpa Divisional Board Cleveland Shire Council – Tingalpa Shire Council Redland Shire Council – Redland City Council Redland Shire Council Offices, south-west corner Bloomfield and Middle Streets, c1950 Image: A frame from Leona Kyling’s home movies 1950 – early 1960s. WARNING: Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander peoples should be aware that this document may contain the images and/or names of people who have passed away. Information and images from resources held in Local History Collections, Redland City Council Libraries. Local History in catalogue [email protected] or 3829 8311 Ziegenfusz farm, 1980s HP4165 Contents Quandamooka people ....................................................................................................................................... 2 Early European settlers ...................................................................................................................................... 2 Local Government and Early Development ....................................................................................................... 6 Clerk’s Task List 1894 ....................................................................................................................................... 13 WWII ................................................................................................................................................................ 22 Amalgamation ................................................................................................................................................. 24 1950s ............................................................................................................................................................... 25 1960s ............................................................................................................................................................... 28 1970s ............................................................................................................................................................... 32 The Council Crest ............................................................................................................................................. 34 1980s ............................................................................................................................................................... 34 1990s ............................................................................................................................................................... 37 A new Century ................................................................................................................................................. 38 2010s ............................................................................................................................................................... 39 2020 ................................................................................................................................................................. 43 1955 aerial ....................................................................................................................................................... 45 1970 aerial ....................................................................................................................................................... 46 1994 aerial ....................................................................................................................................................... 47 2006 aerial ....................................................................................................................................................... 48 2020 aerial ....................................................................................................................................................... 49 Elected Members Photo Gallery: ..................................................................................................................... 51 Chairmen/Mayors from 1880 .......................................................................................................................... 61 1 | P a g e Quandamooka people Quandamooka people have lived on and around the islands and the coast of Quandamooka (Moreton Bay) for tens of thousands of years, and the sea has been a major source of food. Utilising nets, traps, and even their feet people fished the seas and freshwater creeks. They hunted and trapped animals and birds, and supplemented their diet with fruits, nuts, and roots, grinding some to bake bread. They used others to make medicines, soaps and even insect repellents. Substantial huts in villages, camps and significant ceremonial sites are known to have existed in large numbers along the coast and in areas where fresh water could be accessed, either from creeks or waterholes, or perhaps from wells. At the time of the first European arrivals in the area there were more than 5,000 Aboriginal people estimated to be living here. From The Narrative of Thomas Pamphlett 1823, p.117 describing a village on the shores of Raby Bay (Doobawah) Early European settlers Early European Settlers in the district shared stories and wrote accounts of what they saw and experienced. These oral and written accounts have helped us to build a picture of what life may have been like before Europeans arrived. Sarah Fredericks recalled her father exchanging farm goods for honey, and some other foods that people dug or caught; and how King Tommy Minnippi would mind children for settlers; 1886- 1895 Chairman William Ross’s son wrote about his childhood living on Cleveland Point, and how he loved to live with the Aboriginal families for quite lengthy periods, learning about their lifestyle and how to fish. John Dunmore Lang said that the natives around Moreton Bay spoke no less than eight distinct dialects. In her book written in the 1940s or 1950s, Leona Kyling wrote about methods of training for the children and she devoted several pages to stories that she had learned from her grandparents, brick-maker John and Elizabeth Sherrin. The Sherrins were early settlers in the area, arriving in 1860. They were involved in the early development of the Cleveland area. Mrs Bigge started school classes in the Paxton Street court room, assisted by Mrs Sherrin. A few years later in 1868 the Cleveland government school opened in North Street. While obviously written from a European perspective, Mrs Kyling’s descriptions also give us a valuable insight into the area’s pre-European past. John Dunmore Lang suggested in 1845 that the proposed Moreton Bay shipping port should be established either at Toorbul or Cleveland. The following year Collector of Customs Augustine Duncan suggested that a township should be opened up at Cleveland Point. Within 7 or 8 years nearly 50 blocks of land had been sold and building had started on Bigge’s store and a jetty. Bigge championed the early development of Cleveland and the push for Cleveland Point to become the major port. This debate was lost in 1849, and the port never eventuated. For over 100 years after this Cleveland was widely referred to as Sleepy Hollow. By 1852, George Thorn had employed brick makers to build a large store. At some time between 1850 and 1860 George Thorn acquired 631 acres in the area between South Street, Redland Bay Road and King Street. Thorn had a long history in the early Moreton Bay colony, having been put in charge of the penal settlement at Limestone, now called Ipswich, in 1839. When the penal settlement closed the same year, he stayed in the area and pursued a variety of business interests, especially involving real estate. Thornlands was later named after him. 2 | P a g e Joseph Clark arrived in the district in 1849 and by 1855 he ran cattle on 25,000 acres stretching from Ormiston through Mount Cotton, south to the Logan River and east to Moreton Bay. By 1858 Clark had relinquished the lease, which went to Thomas Blacket (T B) Stevens who ran a wool scour and fellmongery (tannery) on Hilliards Creek. Clark then worked for Captain Louis Hope. Captain Louis Hope is credited with pioneering the sugar industry in Queensland, however his own participation was relatively short-lived. After a dispute over milling cane, the court awarded damages against him in 1874. Swearing he would never again crush a stick of cane, he dismantled the mill and sold his Ormiston property in 1875. In 1882 he sold the Coomera property and returned to England. Between them through the 1850s and 60s, Thomas Lodge Murray Prior and Captain Louis Hope owned almost all of the coastal land which was to become the Cleveland Shire Council district from 1885. Queensland was declared a separate colony in 1859. In 1862 in response to problems with excessive drinking at hotels on the Point, the district’s first court house was set up, in a cottage built by Francis Bigge for workers at his sawmill, with an added Police lock-up. It operated until 1879, and the building is now the Court House Restaurant in Paxton Street. Buildings on Cleveland Point, including those constructed by early entrepreneur Francis Bigge had underground brick rain water tanks, and water was pumped up by hand. Bigge at one stage owned almost all of the land on the eastern side of the Point, south to North Street. He built the Grand View Hotel (as his first home at that time), several workers cottages, including what would

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    67 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us